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Raysut Cement profit rises 62% to US$49.4m so far in 2012
12 November 2012Oman: Raysut Cement has reported that its profit before tax rose by 62% to US$49.4m for the first nine months of 2012. This compares to US$30.7m for the same period in 2011. Oman's biggest cement producer has attributed the increase to higher sales volumes of cement and better price 'realisation'.
Raysut Cement's revenue for the first nine months of 2012 rose by 12% to US$183m, compared to US$163m in 2011. The group's subsidiary Pioneer Cement reported a profit of US$9.79m in 2012 compared to US$3.87m in 2011.
The group produced 2.83Mt of cement in the first nine months of 2012, an increase of 21% year-on-year compared to 2.33Mt in 2011. It produced 2.63Mt of clinker, an increase of 4% year-on-year compared to 2.53Mt in 2011. The group sold 2.84Mt of cement during the first nine months of 2012, compared to 2.40Mt in 2011.
In its forecast Raysut predicted that the construction industry in Oman would grow to US$5bn by 2016 at an average rate of 6%. It supported this assertion with the news that a number of formerly suspended programmes in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been reinstated. Yet the group added that cement supplies in Oman remain under 'significant' pressure from imports from UAE. It is estimated that UAE has an overcapacity of cement of around 65%. Raysut also expects that demand in Yemen and east Africa will aid the company.
Lafarge nine months sales up by 4% but profit down
09 November 2012France: Lafarge has reported that its sales have risen by 4% to Euro4.39bn in the first nine months of 2012, compared to Euro4.21bn in the same period of 2011. However, the French multinational cement producer's profits are still suffering due to restructuring charges and an impairment in the second quarter. So far in 2012 Lafarge's net income has fallen by 44% to Euro332m from Euro596m. For the third quarter of 2012 net income fell by 5% to Euro319m from Euro336m.
Lafarge's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) for its cement business rose by 5% for the first nine months of 2012 to Euro2.22bn from Euro2.08bn in 2011. Cement sales increased by 3% to Euro7.90bn from Euro7.49bn. Cement volumes declined by 2% to 106Mt from 109Mt. For the third quarter of 2012 cement volumes declined by 4% year-on-year to 36.6Mt from 38.2Mt in 2011. Lafarge attributed this to the construction slowdown in Europe, unfavourable third quarter weather conditions in the central United States and the sale of some of its US assets to Eagle Materials in October 2012.
"Our actions to generate sales growth and cash, reduce debt and improve returns led to a fourth consecutive quarter of positive trends even in a lower growth volume environment. These actions will accelerate as we implement Euro550m of innovation and cost savings initiatives in 2013 of our four year, Euro1.75bn additional EBITDA plan," said Bruno Lafont, chairman and chief executive officer of Lafarge.
By region cement volumes declined by 10% in north America to 4.1Mt year-on-year in the third quarter of 2012 from 4.5Mt. Western Europe saw a decline of 12% in the third quarter to Euro4.2Mt from Euro4.9Mt. Lafarge's central and eastern Europe region saw a drop of 8% to 4.5Mt from 4.7Mt. In Poland the group blamed a slowdown on the aftermath of the European Football Championship in June 2012. In Russia a production 'limitation' at a plant near Moscow caused problems. In the 'Middle East and Africa' region volumes fell by 4% to 10.8Mt from 11.4Mt.
In Latin America cement volumes rose by 5% to 2.4Mt from 2.3Mt. Cement sales in the region were led by a 12% boost in Brazil. In Asia volumes rose by 3% to 10.6Mt from 104Mt. Lafarge singled out a 25% increases in domestic cement sales in India, 11% in the Philippines and 14% in Indonesia. Despite increases in volumes in China, Lafarge noted that cement sales were impacted by slower construction growth and increased competition.
In its outlook Lafarge concluded that it expects to see cement demand growing from 1-4% in 2012 driven by emerging markets. The group will hold its target of reducing net debt to below Euro10bn as soon as possible in 2013.
HeidelbergCement reports revenue up by 9.4% so far in 2012
08 November 2012Germany: HeidelbergCement has reported that its revenue for the first nine months of 2012 rose by 9.4% to Euro10.5bn from Euro9.62bn in 2011. The German construction materials group reported that earnings before interest and income taxes (EBIT) stayed flat at Euro1.07bn in 2012 compared to Euro1.08bn in 2011. Profit before tax fell by 5% to Euro601m from Euro635m.
Results for the third quarter of 2012 showed a different trend, with increasing EBIT and profit. Revenue rose by 9% to Euro3.94bn from Euro3.62bn compared with the same quarter of 2011. EBIT rose by 11% to Euro608m from Euro548m. Profit before tax rose by 6% to Euro427 from Euro403m. At the end of September 2012 the group's net debt stood at Euro7.76bn, a reduction of Euro740m compared to September 2011.
Cement and clinker sales rose by 2.5% for the first nine months of 2012, to 67Mt from 65.4Mt in 2011. By quarter, its sales remained flat, hitting 24.3Mt in the third quarter of 2012. The group attributed the increase for the nine-month period to a continued recovery of residential construction in North America and a persistently strong demand in Asia. The group blamed declining infrastructure expenditure in some European markets for its losses. The largest contribution to sales volumes was made by the 'Asia-Pacific' group area, followed by North America. The sales volumes of the 'Eastern Europe-Central Asia' and 'Africa-Mediterranean Basin' group areas remained at the previous year's level.
Italcementi’s nine month profit crashes by 92%
08 November 2012Italy: Italcementi's net profit for the first nine months of 2012 has fallen by 92% to Euro17.1m from Euro213m in the same period in 2011. The Italian cement major blamed the on-going crisis in western Europe and new competition in Egypt and Morocco.
Italcementi's revenue for the year to 30 September 2012 fell by 4.4% to Euro3.39bn from Euro3.55bn. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) fell by 11.6% to Euro517m from Euro584m. For the third quarter of 2012, year-on-year decreases in revenue and EBITDA were similar to the year-to-date results. However, the company's net profit fell by 34.7% to Euro16.3m from Euro25m.
Italcementi's 'Central Western Europe' region sold 12.2Mt of cement during the first nine months of 2012, a drop of 16.8% compared to the same period in 2011. The 'Emerging Europe, North Africa and Middle East' region sold 11.1Mt, a drop of 4.9%. North America remained flat with 3.2Mt sold. Asia posted a rise of 7.1% with 7.6Mt sold.
In its report Italcementi singled out significant cement and clinker sales improvements in India and Thailand. Despite declining volumes in Egypt the company pointed out that as the country's political situation stabilises, the strengthening upturn in consumption could offer opportunities for improvements in group operations on the main market in the North Africa and the Middle East.
In its outlook the company called for greater caution given an intensification of decline in demand in the third quarter of 2012. It also mentioned that, in addition to completing the investments and efficiency measures planned during the year, the company is preparing new measures to 'significantly' reduce operating costs.